Lancaster prepares for 'biggest game'

England head coach Stuart Lancaster said "there is no hiding away from where the responsibility and the accountability lies" as his team get ready for their must-win 2015 Rugby World Cup match against Australia on Saturday (3rd October).

It means that England must beat Australia at Twickenham on Saturday – a bonus point draw would also keep them afloat – or they will face the humiliation of exiting their own World Cup after just 15 days.

Wales, though, have by no means secured a safe quarter-final passage themselves, and their fate could boil down to a Twickenham showdown with Australia on Saturday week if England beat the Wallabies and then claim an expected five-point maximum against Uruguay.

The opening five minutes were played at a madcap pace, with Wales immediately making their intentions clear through a superb George North break before the forwards battered away at Fiji’s line.

Although Fiji initially held out, it could not last, and Wales went ahead through a seventh-minute touchdown from Twickenham try hero Davies when he threw a dummy pass to Fiji’s last line of defence before crossing unopposed.

Biggar added the conversion, but Wales’ Twickenham nemesis – their scrum – soon resurfaced as Fiji established early set-piece supremacy before opening their account through a Volavola penalty.

Wales did not deviate from their attacking philosophy, and a superb Biggar break ultimately freed World Cup debutant Tyler Morgan in space. And when Morgan was tackled short, Baldwin picked up to crash over.

Another Biggar conversion made it 17-3, yet Wales could not escape their scrummaging problems, and a second successful Volavola penalty as a direct result of those issues cut the deficit to 11 points at half-time.

Wales needed to assert authority early in the second period, but the complete opposite happened as Fiji grew in confidence on the back of a dominant scrum.

And they breached Wales’ defence in spectacular fashion, cutting loose from deep when wing Asaeli Tikoirotuma sprinted clear, and a stunning move ended with Goneva touching down, before Volavola’s conversion underlined it was emphatically a case of game on.

Wales desperately had to calm things down, and that influence predictably arrived through Biggar, who landed a long-range penalty for his 12th successful World Cup kick from 12 attempts.

There was no pattern or predictability to the game, which unquestionably suited Fiji more than their opponents, yet another Biggar penalty opened up a 10-point advantage and Fiji finally had no reply.